The Darwin Awards

Unabridged
Author: Wendy Northcutt
Narrator: Jason Harris
Genres: Comedy
Publisher: Listen & Live Audio
Date: August 2001
Length: 3 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD
  • WMA

Overview

Warning: The Darwin Awards are not for the tenderhearted. The vastly popular Web site, now a book, recognizes "individuals who ensure the long-term survival of our species by removing themselves from the gene pool in a sublimely idiotic fashion." Who wins a Darwin Award? Terrorists who set their bombs on daylight saving time and delivered them on standard time, blowing themselves up. Folks who put garlands around a Bengal tiger's neck. Guys in Cambodia who took turns stomping on a land mine they'd brought into a bar. The six Egyptians who drowned trying to rescue a chicken that fell into a well. (The chicken alone survived.) The Buenos Aires husband who threw his wife out an eighth-floor window during a spat, noticed she'd gotten caught in power lines, and jumped after her, "angrily trying to finish the job, or remorsefully hoping to rescue her." He went splat; she escaped unscathed. There are some urban legends, like the sergeant said to have attached a Jet-Assisted Take-Off unit to his Chevy and hit a cliff 125 feet up (not true, says author Wendy Northcutt), and all-too-true honorable mentions, like the man who put weather balloons on his lawn chair, soared to 16,000 feet, crashed into power lines, blacked out Long Beach, California, and told police, "A man can't just sit around." My favorite winner: the man who was bitten nine times by the same king brown snake because he put it in a bag on his car seat and kept sticking his hand back into the bag. Why did he pick up the snake with his left hand? "Because I was holding a beer in my right one." And where did this take place? In Darwin, Australia. If you think somebody up there doesn't have a wicked sense of humor, The Darwin Awards may change your mind.

Reviews (15)

I can't understand why I selected this book

Written by Pamela Buchheit on February 10th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 1/5

Wow, this was this stupiedest book ever created. I made the mistake of assumption with this one. I thought it would have some sort of intelligence in it since it had the name Darwin in it. It was a bunch of short stories, about stupid things people have done, to earn them a darwin award. Seriously that is what the whole book is about. It is like watching Spike TV or America's Funniest Video's. That's all it was. I was so mad for even selecting this book!! Please, don't waste your time.

darwin awards

Written by Bryan Parlee from Toronto, ON on November 22nd, 2006

  • Book Rating: 3/5

A few good laughs. It tends to start to seem like the same old thing happens over and over again

Darwin Awards

Written by Autumn Smith on November 1st, 2006

  • Book Rating: 3/5

It was not remarkable, I didn't listen to the whole thing.

The Darwin Awards

Written by Memphis Mel on October 14th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Incredible how stupid we humans can be! Funny, head-shaking & engaging. If you have children younger than teenaged, don't listen to the 2nd CD in their presence.

Darwin Awards

Written by Mark McCann on June 26th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 4/5

The Darwin Awards is a hilarious book, filled with eye-rolling stories of those “intellectuals” among us who self-initiate their way to natural selection. As the bumper sticker says, “The gene pool could use a little chlorine.”

I liked it

Written by Anonymous on April 25th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 3/5

I thought the book was interesting, and I am looking forward to the next in the series. I never knew people could be so dumb.

Darwin Awards

Written by Anonymous on June 2nd, 2005

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I usually love the Darwin Awards, but this reading was only mildly funny. It is definitely amusing to discover what crazy things people do.

A better book to read I think.

Written by Anonymous from Casco, MI on May 30th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 3/5

I have read a few of the Darwin Award books in the past and thought to give an audio version a try and found it somewhat lacking. The book was good I just didn't really appreciate the audio version of it.

Darwin Awards

Written by Anonymous from Washington, DC on April 18th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 2/5

Slightly entertaining. Like an episode of funny home videos. But the narration is dry and I only listend to the first CD.

Darwin Awards

Written by Anonymous on February 23rd, 2005

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Humans can do amazingly stupid things that get them into trouble or killed. This book highlights those achievements with a humorous narrative.

Author Details

Author Details

Northcutt, Wendy

"Wendy Northcutt studied molecular biology at UC Berkeley, then worked in a neuroscience research lab at Stanford University. She launched the Darwin Awards archive on a Stanford website, and emailed stories to a small list of friends. When academia began to pall, she joined a start-up company hoping to develop cancer and diabetes therapeutics, and continued to work on the Darwin Awards.

Eventually the lure of the Internet proved too strong to resist, and Wendy abdicated her laboratory responsibilities to pursue a dream. She now works as a freelance webmaster, and hones her skills on the Darwin Awards website. Today, nominations from a worldwide network of fans are presented for vote and debate at www.DarwinAwards.com.

Wendy first learned of the concept of the Darwin Awards from her cousin Ian, a mildly eccentric philosopher who later started his own religion in order to avoid shaving his beard while working in the pizza industry. Ian is now pursuing a degree in archeology, and his hair is no longer an issue.

Wendy devotes her free time to studying human behavior, writing Darwin Awards, reading, traveling, and gardening."